If you want to try attracting hogs, try putting some corn in a 5 gal bucket and fill it with water. Let it set several days until it sours. I've heard the smell will draw them a mile.
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I'll try it, I have a few bags in the shedIf you want to try attracting hogs, try putting some corn in a 5 gal bucket and fill it with water. Let it set several days until it sours. I've heard the smell will draw them a mile.
Just my observations. Pigs will go where there is food, water, cover, and lack of pressure. If they aren't consistently hitting an area it's likely there is pressure, assuming the other things are there to bring them in. I kill pigs constantly in the same areas. When I clear out one group another comes in shortly after. Boar are a little different as they cruise looking for sow. I've noticed them being inconsistent in their patterns unless they are moving with sow.@KatoKevin454 In my observation wild hogs tend to move around unless they have a steady food supply. They roam to forage and root. I’m not used to seeing them return to the same areas repeatedly. They come and go in my neck of the woods. Dunno about people and areas that regularly bait them. If you put some trail cams out, you’ll get a good feel for what’s moving where and when. If you don’t physically see them in the area the ground will often tell the tale if there’s any food around for them. How you liking Texas so far?
@Larcat Refer to “Texas Parks and Wildlife: Outdoor Annual” publication. What your need to know is in it. I was told they went digital this year. Ordinarily they can be picked up at places that issue hunting/fishing licenses or at the county courthouse/game warden’s office.I am having a heckuva time trying to figure out the public land regs here in Texas. Corps lands are different than TPWD lands, but both require thr state permit. Then there's all these dove/small game public leases that all have different rules.
I just want to go walk around the woods and shoot at squirrels and rabbits.
I trap as a side gig (all the money I make goes back into gear so I don't consider myself a professional) and shoot a bunch of pigs each year. This sort of works, but I quit after trying it a few times. I prefer something sweet like coolaid, or jello. Personally I use a different secret ingredient that I'm not willing to share here but it's similar in that it's a sweet smell. I find it works just as well and I don't have to deal with the sickening soured smell. It also isn't a problem if some gets on me. The main thing I feel like rotten bait is good for, is to keep the deer off of it. Some guys use a little bit of diesel on the corn for the same affect. Personally I like open top, tall corral traps, so catching deer isn't a problem there, and I don't mind feeding the deer so I just run straight corn with a strong sweet smelling attractant. If it's a liquid put it in a spray bottle with a fine mist setting and just spray it in the air, while standing over your bait pile, when the wind is blowing towards where the pigs are moving through. Then spray a little on the bait and in your tracks as a bit of a cover sent. That's my method and for 4-5 years I was averaging 100-200 pigs shot or trapped a year. I've slowed down a little the last year or so, I've probably only gotten 20-30 in the last year.If you want to try attracting hogs, try putting some corn in a 5 gal bucket and fill it with water. Let it set several days until it sours. I've heard the smell will draw them a mile.